I saw you survive the explosion and fireball and then vanish.
Continuum returns, and Kiera’s playing Batman—except she has no idea who he is.
I saw you survive the explosion and fireball and then vanish.
Continuum returns, and Kiera’s playing Batman—except she has no idea who he is.
Continuum‘s first season comes to a series-changing finale. Some questions are answered, while many more remain.
In our Weekly Digital Disc Picks, Alex notes that the best thing to watch this week would be the Olympics. They featured an awesome opening ceremony that careened from sublime to ridiculous, sometimes on purpose, and made a few nodes to SF and Fantasy.1 The games, as always, have been sensational.
Of course, some of us still want our hit of digital genre, and that brings us to this week’s episode of Continuum.
This week riffs somewhat predictably on The Manchurian Candidate, but it also features some promising and suspenseful developments in the greater story arc.
Every cop show has an episode where a main character knows the victim, suspect, or perpetrator, but someone remains involved in the case. This is that ep. “The Politics of Time” also features a fair bit of SF.
Continuum returns after a week’s absence, and Liber8 steps up their game.
This week’s episode plays with the Grandfathermother Paradox, and puts our heroes in a field of Lilies.
This week’s episode features a strong beginning and a science-based plot, but the broader developments and themes are more important than the specific crime, which has an obvious solution, if no easy resolution.
Shades of Charlie Jade and Terminator: SCC (with hints of Life on Mars)! Canadian television has launched a new SF series this spring, involving a time-travelled hero in touch with a youth who will one day be significant, terrorism, and technology.
We’ll also address and take comments on the first two episodes.